There is so much love (and rockets) on the
final page of Jaime Hernandez’s The Love Bunglers, so much genuine loving
emotion between Maggie and Ray, built up on years of pain and tragedy and
guilt, that it’s the perfect enduing for these characters, and I would have no
problems if their story ended right here.
I love these people in the stories more
than any other characters in all of fiction, and I wouldn’t mind if I never see
them again, if it can climax with a final declaration of love and end on a
tearful and heartfelt kiss.
That’s how good The Love Bunglers is.
Once again, there is the terrible guilt
that I‘m not saying enough about Beto whenever I get a new Love and Rockets,
but that’s the way it goes. King Vampire and And Then Reality Kicks In are
terrific little comics with the usual hidden depths, but they don’t have the
emotional catharsis of Jaime’s work, they don’t have decades of storytelling
building and building to tiny little moments of transcendent wonder.
And once again, this is no review. This is
love.
The art is as beautiful as always,
evocative of time and place, and Jaime still draws the best body language and facial
expressions in the medium, telling entire stories in a frown or wink.
It can be as mundane as the long and lonely
path that leads to a crappy meal in a crappy diner –
- or
the easy confidence of somebody who is finally comfortable in her own uneasy
skin.
All over, the art is as beautiful as ever,
and it’s so easy to get lost in Jaime’s gorgeous profiles, or his effortless command
of geography, or simple panels of people looking at each other.
Jaime’s panel structure is also still
incredibly rigid, but that just keeps all that energy and vigour bottled up
there on the page, released with every new visit. There is more artistic
enjoyment in his flowing line than can be found in dozens of other comics. It’s
just gorgeous.
While it’s no surprise that Jaime Hernandez
is still producing magnificent and beautiful comics, it is also still incredible to see
how big his storytelling balls are, man.
Much of The Love Bunglers takes place at
the same leisurely pace Jaime’s stories have had for the past few years, but
after a startling piece of violence that throws the future up in the air, the
story bounces forward two years, and after three pages, takes another similar
leap forward in time, showing how things worked out for Maggie and Ray.
(And Hopey – there was another big emotional
kick to see little Hopey all settled down and reasonably successful. The fact
that this little hellion has grown up enough and can lend Maggie the money to
start up her business is astonishing, but not as astonishing as the fact that I
felt genuinely proud for her that she
had got this far. She’s still got that same awesome haircut she had as a
16-year-old, but Hopey is All Grown Up.)
Those last seven pages are dense with
information and revelation, but it doesn’t overwhelm the story. The abrupt
leaps in time allow for drastic changes that seem so natural, like things were
always going to end this way.
And the comfort in that is so warm and
toasty. The past is still spiky and tragic, but it all worked out in the end.
Oh man, that bit when I realised what was
happening in that montage was the most emotionally moving moment I’ve read in a
comic book since, well, the last Love and Rockets.
Letty’s story is also an unexpected treat –
telling a tale that answers questioned first asked decades ago, while providing
details that are absolutely essential to the ongoing narrative.
With a continuation of all that painfully
unnecessary guilt and shame from Browntown in #3, Return For Me also shows that
everyone leaves Maggie, no matter how much they intend to stay. Poor Letty’s
last thoughts are that she will always be there for Maggie, and you can bet her
family, and Speedy, and Hopey and Ray and Calvin and all those others made the
same promise, only to leave Maggie behind.
Dig it: Jaime Hernandez is now telling
stories that cast a whole new light on 30 years worth of comics. That’s an
astonishing feat.
I really, really hate Coronation Street, (mainly because I wasn’t allowed to watch the Incredible Hulk on
the other channel when I was a kid), but it makes so many other people so happy
that I never want it to go away.
It is also hard to hate something that has
evolved from a bog-standard soap opera into something else. It’s still rubbish
on an everyday basis, but when you consider it as the continuous biography of
an ordinary man named Ken Barlow, it’s something extraordinary.
Ken – as played by William Roache – has had
his daily life dissected by an audience of millions since 1960. That’s 51 years
ago. Ken has grown from a pimply little dork to an affable old man. He has the
world record for being the longest-running character in a televised soap opera,
and Ken’s wikipedia page is more than 10,000 words long.
He has been a teacher, journalist, waiter,
newspaper editor, writer, male escort and trolley pusher, and has been married
four times, fathering numerous offspring. He’s the most boring man on the most
boring show of all time, but over fifty years, it adds up. What a life!
Jamie’s Locas stories are just like that,
but instead of being the most boring thing ever, the story of Maggie, Hopey,
Izzy, Ray, Doyle and Angel has been fascinating, moving, exhilarating, sad,
silly, beautiful and utterly human. To see characters grow and develop over
decades of terrific stories is one of the great pleasures of these comics. All
the young punks have grown up, but that doesn’t make them any less interesting.
(And yes, it’s particularly ironic that
this latest Love and Rockets - which pays off on situations set up 20 years ago
and shows the growth and maturing of ripe characterisation - came out right at
the point that DC is putting out All New All Different versions of the same old
characters, giving them another tedious reboot because people can’t handle the
idea that Superman isn’t 29-years-old any more - but let’s not go there right
now….)
So if it did end? If Jaime went off and did
Wolverine comics for the rest of his career, or spent the remainder of his life
sitting on a mountain painting landscapes? It would certainly be painful, but
to leave the characters where they stand isn’t a bad way to finish it.
The artist himself has even expressed in
interviews some trepidation about where the story could go from here, but he
undoubtedly has more stories he could tell. Angel’s story is just beginning,
Izzy is undoubtedly off doing something peculiar, and it’s always nice to see
what Doyle is up to.
But for Maggie and Ray and Hopey – this
isn’t a bad place to leave them. You never really stop growing up, but if you
can mature enough to get to a point where you’re actually happy with yourself
and the way things turned out, then…
What else is there?
Just love, baby.
Love.
4 comments:
L&R New Stories 3 & 4 absolutely blew me away. I also would be happy & satisfied if the Locas saga ended here, but I sure hope Jaime keeps telling these stories!
Jaime has been a HUGE influence on my artwork and while I love his storytelling, but I think Beto's stories are just a bit better.
I had the great pleasure of hosting Jaime and Gilbert last week at a conference at the University of Iowa, and he told me amazing things about this issue (which you appreciate as fully as I do): he said it wrote itself, with him simply doing the drawing, and that he wrote this in case he was hit by a bus the next day. He said he plans to go on, but wanted to be able not to ... really amazing. I'm glad the world is starting to recognize that he is, 30 years in, at the top of his game.
I must be missing something. Having never read an issue, I just am not getting the vibe from these excerpted panels. What am I missin?
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